50th Anniversary: our story since 1973

Page 6

OUR JOURNEY

The Right Honourable the Lord Lingfield

Her Excellency, Princess Victoria Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire

Keith Ramsay, ABE Chair

Rob May, ABE CEO

ABE – Making a difference for 50 years

01 Contents 11
03
Foreword 05
Foreword 07
Foreword 09
Foreword
OUR JOURNEY 02

Foreword The Right Honourable the Lord Lingfield, Kt EdD DLitt LLD DL

This year ABE celebrates the five decades since its foundation of a highly successful education service which is engaged in many parts of the world. It has proved that, in these times of change, one thing remains reassuringly constant, and that is the allure of British education. This country’s qualifications, its vocational education institutions and its universities remain very attractive on the global stage due to their relentless focus on standards and on ground-breaking research.

The UK’s high-quality education sector is one of the most important factors contributing to the country’s prestige and ‘soft power’. There is a conventional assumption that international students, as a result of their positive educational and cultural experiences here, will identify more closely with the UK, forming a cultural diaspora, and as they reach positions of influence in their home countries, will be inclined to favour British interests. Today, however, that image is being rightly transformed through an emerging shift in

values. ABE’s education offer, whether in this country or abroad is distinctly inclusive, striving to accommodate diversity of thought and experience through its high-quality development of a curriculum that takes responsible care to blend British-led research with international inquiry and practice.

British institutions are leading the western world in reshaping the tertiary and higher education landscape, through the internationalisation of education. The task of creating a learning experience which represents universal knowledge and also respects local intellectual traditions and skills needs will be a necessary one for transnational education over the decade ahead and is of vital importance for building trust and achieving long-term global goals.

03

In the commercial world, translatable skills are essential for creating a space where professionals can be relied upon to conduct business in predictable, similar ways. Settling on a model of international standards to achieve this does not have to mean cultural convergence, rather management skills can be advanced as a technical facility available and understandable to all, to make international trade all the more frictionless amidst a mosaic of cultural differences.

ABE has made its practice to seek out equitable global partnerships and has focused on building human and institutional capacities which reflect not only the experience of learning and working in London or New York, but also in Accra, Dubai, Kuala Lumpur, or New Delhi. I am encouraged also that alongside the development of technical business skills, ABE has promoted an international code of business ethics. Whilst most multinational firms have basic policies on employee integrity, there is relatively little educational space as yet dedicated to ethical guidelines in a global context concerning bribery, exploitive child labour, human rights violations and other issues that graduates may encounter in the global marketplace.

ABE deserves every congratulation on sustaining a global-local approach, on developing a modern and relevant curriculum, and on achieving half a century of success in the export of high quality education.

OUR JOURNEY 04
“ABE’s education offer, whether in this country or abroad is distinctly inclusive, striving to accommodate diversity of thought and experience.”

Foreword

Her Excellency, Princess Victoria Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals, Nigeria

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development recognises that we must make quality education available to all, to achieve a prosperous and peaceful world. These targets specifically include the elimination of gender disparities, ensuring equal access and affordability, and are inclusive of youth, adults, persons living with disabilities, men and women, across developing and developed countries.

Across the world today, substantial barriers are limiting both the youth and adults from gaining new skills which will enable them to compete in a rapidly evolving world. Through the development of an open and flexible learning environment we may be able to help vulnerable people circumvent issues such as proximity to learning resources, poverty, the effects of conflict, poor infrastructure and more, which hinder them from learning. The future of education will no doubt rely largely on the use of digital tools and technology to provide relevant knowledge and skills for all.

Due to the disruption of education by Covid-19, especially as it affected students in OECD countries, I am aware that ABE took defining steps, by adapting to open book exams and switching to remote learning – the first UK awarding body to do so. This helped to provide thousands of young people with the opportunity to continue with their education unabated.

In developing countries, we witnessed the unprecedented effects of interrupted education due to school closures amid mandatory lockdowns. Girls were disproportionately impacted by this, as a good number failed to return to school alongside increases in the reportage of violence and abuse, unplanned pregnancies and child marriages.

05

More than ever, this reveals the need to build resilience and inclusion into our education systems to ensure that we bridge education and skills gaps as we strive to leave no one behind.

By partnering with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Read and Earn Federation, ABE is contributing immensely to the promotion of education in Nigeria. Programmed to run for ten years, the digital entrepreneurial skills course aims to reach around 120,000 Nigerian youths each year. Digital tools are thus helping to promote collaboration, create access to a greater variety of resources, tailor the learning experience, and overall transform the future of education.

Young girls of middle and high-school age, who are at risk of dropping out of school are also being supported through scholarships and grants to help them kick-start their own businesses. Upon graduation, they will go on to contribute positively to their communities and various development landscapes.

At the heart of ABE’s work is a drive to provide inclusive, high-quality business education and skills, to produce entrepreneurs who can compete globally and transform their local communities. As ABE commemorates their fiftieth anniversary, this Special Edition highlights a long and distinguished history of bridging skills gaps, especially for those who are furthest behind.

OUR JOURNEY 06
“At the heart of ABE’s work is a drive to provide inclusive, high-quality business education and skills...”

When Lyndon Jones set up ABE in south west London in February 1973, little did anyone know how the world of education and skills would change over the next half a century. We have moved from a world at that time where the computer’s involvement in education was minimal to an age where technology and technological solutions are the default position for almost every decision we take and the latest versions seem to be required to access information, data and knowledge.

What hasn’t changed however is that the values and vision that lie at the heart of ABE are still as relevant today as they were half a century ago- “accessible education, affordable for all”. The most important thing is that ABE is still here, still based in south west London and still as relevant today as it was five decades ago.

There are too many people – teachers, influencers and students themselves –involved in the growth and development of ABE to name them individually but

on behalf of the current Board of ABE, I want to express our thanks for all of their contributions to the success of this organisation, its role in our operating countries and beyond, its continuing innovation and its growing reputation as more than just an awarding organisation but as a thought leader within the sector.

Happy birthday ABE –and here’s to the next 50 years!

07
OUR JOURNEY 08

Foreword

ABE is guided by a simple idea. We believe that the world is a better place when everyone has access to economic opportunity. This includes people starting their career and professionals seeking to expand their horizons and boost their earning power.

Since 1973, we have helped thousands of people to build a productive and prosperous life as an entrepreneur or executive, through the power of education. From the beginning, our outlook has been truly international. We ran our first exams in London, Hong Kong, and Singapore, and from there have grown into a leader in international business education. To date, over 3 million ABE exams have been sat.

ABE never sleeps, we have expanded our operations across four continents with a global team working across different time zones, and who are always ready to support our students and centres. We have always channelled most of our efforts towards low-and-middle income countries, where self-belief and ambition is often at its lowest, and where access to high quality international education is prohibitively

expensive. It has been our mission to empower people everywhere to believe in their potential, by making business skills and meaningful credentials more widely available. Most of the countries we entered decades ago are now achieving greater global economic relevance, and despite recent setbacks, they are rebounding towards a durable recovery based on corporate sector growth. I’m proud to reflect that ABE may have played a small part in this journey. Whilst academic achievement can be measured in a moment, the impact of the ABE experience is deep and lasting. Over time, ABE graduates have added significant value to their local communities and economies.

09

Our efforts to make the world a better place do not stop at offering professional qualifications. Just as the future of education and economic activity is being re-shaped, ABE is consistently re-imagining the scope of our learning offer. We provide a widening range of education solutions designed to ignite a lifelong journey of curiosity and learning from the school room to the board room.

We also want our students to broaden how they perceive the world around them. That’s why we launched the ABE Way manifesto to inspire a community of practice and progress, where learners commit to positive social change and can turn risk and fear into opportunity and security, by changing the way they think, feel, and act. The serious challenges in the world today remind us that these abilities are needed now more than ever.

As we reflect on ABE’s remarkable heritage, it is right to also celebrate our partnerships. ABE would not be here without the hundreds of delivery partners and accredited ABE centres which have shared our vision and commitment. To our loyal supporters we owe a debt of gratitude. It has been an honour to serve and lead ABE through a remarkable journey to rediscover the pioneering spirit which makes us unique amongst British awarding organisations. The challenge before us now is to embrace innovative ways of building economic capacity in our host countries and in the UK, so that we

may continue to provide skills and agency to thousands more young people over the next 50 years.

OUR JOURNEY 10
“It has been an honour to serve and lead ABE through a remarkable journey to rediscover the pioneering spirit which makes us unique amongst British awarding organisations.”

ABE – Making a difference for 50 years

In the early 70s, when office technology consisted of little more than a typewriter and a telephone, a group of senior academics, politicians and business leaders (supported by Macmillan Publishing, the Ford Motor Company, the Ministry of Defence and Unilever) met to discuss a skills deficit in middle and senior management.

Among this group was Lyndon Jones, an academic who had enjoyed a long and distinguished industry career, and who at the time was running a large Further Education College in the UK.

Lyndon saw that companies at that time offered very little in the way of management training and launched The Association of Business Executives. Its purpose was to provide professional training to a high standard for business managers everywhere.

Macmillan Publishing added its support to the new organisation, its magazine Education and Training was renamed and became Business Executive , ABE’s first journal.

1978

1973 – ABE starts

1973 – The first handheld cellular phone goes on sale, priced at $4,000

1973 – The Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) is inaugurated

1977 – ABE launches the Certificate and Diploma in Business Administration

1977 – First ABE exams in UK, Singapore & Hong Kong

1978 – First ABE exams in Cyprus, Greece, Ghana and Zimbabwe

1973
1977 11

ABE’s founder President was Lord Prentice, a British politician who held the posts of Secretary of State for Education and Science (1974 Labour) and Minister for Overseas Development (1975 Labour) and then became Minister of State for Social Security (1979 Conservative). He was knighted in 1987.

People immediately enrolled for ABE courses in large numbers supported by grateful employers. In 1977, ABE launched the Certificate and Diploma in Business Administration and held its first exams in London, Singapore, and Hong Kong. By the end of the 70s ABE was operating across Asia, Africa and Europe.

1979 – First ABE exams in Kenya, Malaysia, Nigeria and Zambia

1980 – ABE launches the Advanced Diploma in Business Administration

1980 – ABE is granted a Coat of Arms

1980 – First ABE exams in Cameroon

1981 – IBM launches the first 16-bit business computer and starts the transition to computing in the workplace

1983 – The internet is born

1979 1983 1980

12 OUR
JOURNEY

ABE was set up as a not-for-profit with a remit to advance business education and so its fees were kept highly affordable. It was soon recognised that ABE qualifications were making a huge difference to people’s lives, particularly in developing nations where few other UK awarding bodies were operating at the time. ABE was providing a route to a professional career for people who faced the prospect of a subsistence-level future due to lack of access to further education. These people were often using their new business skills to set up enterprises which provided employment and prosperity to their wider community.

Empowering people to transform their lives and communities through gaining high-quality business, management and entrepreneurial skills has remained central to the ABE mission ever since. We are committed

to doing this in fragile and challenging environments as well as operating in developed economies.

At the start of the 80s, ABE launched its Advanced Diploma in Business Administration. Demand for ABE programmes grew and our international footprint widened. New programmes were added to the ABE portfolio and the UK head office moved from Wimbledon to larger premises in New Malden (south west London) which has been its home ever since.

13 1984 1991 1984
in Marketing 1985 – The first Microsoft Windows operating system is released 1989 – The Berlin Wall falls 1990 –
in
& Tobago 1991 – In South Africa the Population Registration Act is repealed 1992 – The world’s first mass-produced GSM mobile phone is released (Nokia 1011) 1993 – The world wide web software is released intothe public domain 1992
– ABE launches the Advanced Diploma
First ABE exams held
Trinidad
14 OUR JOURNEY 1994 – Amazon.com is launched 1996 – Webmail services become available starting the switch to office based instant messaging between organisations 1998 – Google is launched 1999 – First ABE Mauritius college is accredited 2000 – First ABE exams in Tanzania 2000 – First ABE exams in Myanmar 2000 – First ABE college is accredited in Sri Lanka
2000
1996
1998

In the 2000s, Edward de Bono became ABE’s President. As the originator of the concept of Lateral Thinking, Edward de Bono is regarded by many as the leading authority in the teaching of creative thinking and innovation. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2005 and wrote over 70 books. Edward de Bono remained ABE’s President up to his death in 2021.

Also, during the 2000s, ABE became officially recognised by the UK government regulator the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) which preceded Ofqual. This increased the portability of our qualifications and the number of university progression options, helping learners who wanted to go onto a degree save thousands of pounds. This was followed by more agreements with local regulators in many of the countries where we operate.

2007

2001 – First ABE exams in Maldives

2004 – Facebook is launched to the public

2005 – First ABE exams in Malawi

2005 – YouTube is launched

2007 – Business Administration renamed Business Management

2007 – ABE Human Resources units launched

2007 – ABE is officially recognised by the QCA

15
2001
2005

2009 – WhatsApp is founded

2010 – ABE is officially recognised by the newly formed Ofqual

2011 – First ABE centre accredited in Guyana

2016 – Business start–up certificate launched

2017 – ABE Endorsed service is launched

2017 – ABE launches Level 2 and Level 3 short awards

16 OUR JOURNEY
2010 2017 2011

During the 2010s Lyndon Jones retired after more than 40 years at the helm. For the thousands of learners who met Lyndon during his long tenure, he was an inspirational figure.

In 2017 Rob May joined as CEO. ABE has built a team of experts who are passionately committed to our core mission to transform lives and communities through advancing business education, whilst also bringing a clear vision to ensure that ABE continues to thrive in the decades to come.

The 2020s have arguably been the most challenging in the half-century of our existence, with a global pandemic, economic crisis, and geopolitical turmoil. Throughout our history we have worked in difficult environments, honing our ability to adapt, as proved by our quick response to ensure assessments could still go ahead during the

2020-2021 pandemic when we committed to an urgent statement of intent ‘No One Left Behind’.

For learners, we’re here to help them develop the skills needed to build a better future. To flourish in the modern world means embracing uncertainty, boldly running towards problems, and turning risk into opportunity. The challenges of today are different to those faced in 1973, but disruption and innovation still require skilled leadership, close attention to business ethics, and translatable management skills. Whatever the future brings, we will not be deterred from our mission to work with delivery partners, learners and education authorities to create a safer and more prosperous world for everyone. That’s the ABE way.

2020

2018 – ABE Endorsed course starts in Somaliland

2018 – ABE funded research to help start-up businesses survive and thrive launched at the Houses of Parliament

2018 – ABE launches Level 3 Business Essentials

2019 – ABE launches its programmes for schools with ABE Endorsed KidsMBA

2020 – ABE launches alternative assessment methods to ensure no one is left behind during the COVID-19 pandemic

2020 – ABE funded report into the long-term impact of providing entrepreneurial education from age 11, is published

17
2018 2019

2021 – ABE publishes the ABE Way manifesto

2021 – ABE Digital courses are launched

2022 – ABE publishes a collective Environmental and Social Impact pledge and recruits centres around the world to become Social Impact Partners

2022 – The first ABE Future Entrepreneur of the Year competition takes place

2023 - First delivery partner in Australia

2023 – ABE celebrates its 50th anniversary

2021 2022 2023

18 OUR JOURNEY

Five decades of social impact

ABE is a not-for-profit skills development specialist and an Ofqual regulated awarding organisation. We provide internationally recognised qualifications, learning, credentials and quality assurance and specialise in the fields of business, entrepreneurship and employability.

Head office: New Malden Business Centre, 46/50 Coombe Road, New Malden, Surrey KT3 4QF, UK + 44 (0)20 8329 2930 \\ info@abeuk.com \\ www.abeuk.com

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.